How Heavy Humans Can Theoretically Lift

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 9. 05. 2024
  • 💪 Discover the incredible world of human strength in this eye-opening video, where we dive deep into the science behind the theoretical limits of how heavy humans can lift. 💪
    If you've ever wondered just how strong humans can become, this is the video for you! We'll explore the science behind muscle growth, the factors that contribute to our lifting capabilities, and the extraordinary examples of strength displayed by elite athletes and strongmen. 🏋️‍♂️
    In this video, you'll learn about:
    The science of muscle growth and its connection to our strength potential 💪
    Factors that impact our lifting capabilities, such as muscle fiber types, body mechanics, and neural adaptations 🧠
    The role of genetics in determining our ultimate strength potential 🧬
    Inspirational examples of elite athletes and strongmen who have pushed the limits of human strength 🏆
    Theoretical maximums for human lifting ability based on biomechanics, physiology, and historical records 🌟
    Join us on this exciting journey as we uncover the fascinating world of human strength and the theoretical limits of how heavy we can lift. Prepare to be amazed by the incredible potential of the human body! 🤯
    How heavy humans can theoretically lift
    how heavy we can theoretically lift
    What's the maximum humans can lift
    What is the best way to train for a deadlift?
    What are the most common deadlift mistakes?
    How much weight should I be able to deadlift?
    What are the benefits of deadlifting?
    What are the risks of deadlifting?
    How can I prevent deadlift injuries?
    Special Thanks to Patreon Supporters:
    Sannu, Bill Pearce, Miroslav Houdek
    Lets chat:
    Business inquiries: thecuriousreason@gmail.com
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 3,9K

  • @CuriousReason
    @CuriousReason  Před rokem +1668

    I added both Imperial and Metric systems as almost half of the viewers I get are from the US and so that everybody in and outside of the US can understand. As for video, rabbit-hole goes deeper, there is a thing called maximum voluntary muscular force (MVMF) I didn't want to add because CZcams doesn't like longer videos. So MVMF is the greatest amount of force a person can generate using their muscles under voluntary control. It's a difficult concept to pin down, as the MVMF of an individual can vary depending on factors such as age, gender, and training history. However, research suggests that the average person's MVMF is around 60-70% of their maximal muscle force. Now, let's put this into context. The current world record for the heaviest weight ever lifted by a human is 263.5 kilograms (581 pounds) in the clean and jerk category, set by Lasha Talakhadze of Georgia in 2021. If we assume that Talakhadze was operating at 70% of his maximal muscle force, we can extrapolate that his theoretical lifting capacity might be around 376.4 kilograms (830 pounds)!

    • @forgottencardboardbox2503
      @forgottencardboardbox2503 Před 11 měsíci +25

      the squat world record is not held by tom Platz he could only squat around 700 pounds not a thousand

    • @ginoyesano5649
      @ginoyesano5649 Před 11 měsíci +16

      @@forgottencardboardbox2503 Yeah, the world record squat is held by Ray Williams

    • @Markmygame
      @Markmygame Před 11 měsíci +37

      The issue of that assessment is that ppl who regularly lift maximally incidentally train their voluntary max to be closer and closer to their involuntary max. A high level weightlifter like him would actually be using around 90% of his involuntary max.

    • @DomFortress
      @DomFortress Před 11 měsíci +10

      And at what cost to the tendons, before a catastrophic structural failure as a result of torn tendons, simply because we overridden our safety limiter? Free weights aren't variable resistance, yet only the latter allows us to safely lift heavier for our tendons and muscles near the full range of motion.
      As for the news paper reports on hysterical strength, how much of the entire weight of the vehicle in question is consistently present during the full range of motion? I mean for anyone who've flipped heavy tires during bootcamps, did the weight of that tire stayed consistently throughout the entire motion, or did it shifted in relation to its center of gravity relative to its pivot?

    • @SuperSoldiers_WL
      @SuperSoldiers_WL Před 11 měsíci +3

      Lasha Talakhadze lifted 267 kilos in 2021 and 270 kg in training

  • @scotthogan1386
    @scotthogan1386 Před rokem +15224

    I find it extremely hard to believe that the average man can only pull 70 kg

    • @benevery
      @benevery Před rokem +1579

      Yeh, maybe (as there's no source) he meant bench or squat

    • @drago7217
      @drago7217 Před rokem

      shut up. majority do not work out at all, nothing

    • @mastersathlete7380
      @mastersathlete7380 Před 11 měsíci +4516

      I'm not surprised. Most of the population is sedentary - which is why obesity and diabetes is such a problem.

    • @shoaibhaq8680
      @shoaibhaq8680 Před 11 měsíci +1407

      Well it's very nuanced that 70kg figure is for a untrained man weighing 200lbs who never lifted before ever in his life

    • @robcubed9557
      @robcubed9557 Před 11 měsíci +613

      I agree. If a 70 kg man can do a single pull-up, which is not difficult, then he can easily deadlift that weight.

  • @albietross1288
    @albietross1288 Před 11 měsíci +5703

    Tom Platz never squatted anything close to 1000lbs. He was known for high reps in the 600-700lb range.

  • @BottledWater741
    @BottledWater741 Před 8 měsíci +159

    she lifted the backside of the car which only weighs around 500 pounds, she had adrenaline which also boosted the blood flow and helped her lift the car, a man pushed a 2 ton boulder off of him while he got caught under it rolling down a cliff but severley damaged all of the muscles used to push it off and needed about a year to make a good recovery, your body will use all of the muscle fibers when you have a life or death situation which causes your muscles to become extremley weak after you do something to that extent.

    • @NikoCv-car_lift_strongman
      @NikoCv-car_lift_strongman Před 6 měsíci +1

      this would weight more than 500lbs on a 3000+lbs car lol, closer to 1000-1200lbs if she lifted both wheels at the back! which is highly unlikely....

    • @Andrewtate200
      @Andrewtate200 Před 4 měsíci +6

      ​@@NikoCv-car_lift_strongmankiddo you don't know anything every part of the car is not equally divideed..

    • @NikoCv-car_lift_strongman
      @NikoCv-car_lift_strongman Před 4 měsíci

      @@Andrewtate200 yea I know nothing about lifting a car or how much that weight.

    • @teemumiettinen7250
      @teemumiettinen7250 Před 2 měsíci +5

      @@NikoCv-car_lift_strongman bruh the front of the car is much more heavy than the rear, assuming that the engine is mounted in the front ofc, engine can weight anywhere from 100-300 KG, also the gearbox is usually mounted right behind the engine, thats another 50-150 KG.

    • @kothrill5733
      @kothrill5733 Před 2 měsíci

      I was going to say the same thing lol

  • @stealthassasin1day291
    @stealthassasin1day291 Před 8 měsíci +41

    Thor lifted 501kg with pure training. Eddie Hall lifted 500kg using mental phycological training. Eddie claimed to have never lifted more than 465kg in training but day of he lifted 500kg. He almost died and passed out for a period of time while Thor was completely fine. There are plenty of hysterical strength stories where the average person performed an incredible feat to save a life but later after find out that they had broken bones or torn muscles or both.

    • @AnemoneEnemy
      @AnemoneEnemy Před měsícem +3

      Eddie also held it for a lot longer

    • @briangoslin1973
      @briangoslin1973 Před 17 dny +1

      Both feats were incredible, but being that Eddie was 6" shorter than Thor and with a significantly smaller frame (albeit a world level strength body frame), Eddies 500 lift was waaaaaay more impressive in terms of a pound-for-pound demonstrations of strength.

    • @petarjuric5828
      @petarjuric5828 Před 2 dny +1

      ​@@briangoslin1973What? Eddie and Thor were both around the same weight at the time of their deadlift records. Also it's harder if you are taller your comment makes no sense at all 😂😂

  • @E-Pluribus-Unum
    @E-Pluribus-Unum Před rokem +5755

    If you think about it, she didn’t lift 3,500 lbs, it would’ve quite literally snapped bone, ligaments and the muscle clean off the bone. She only had to lift around a third or maybe quarter of that weight to get her son out.

    • @hasturthekinginyellow5003
      @hasturthekinginyellow5003 Před rokem +1921

      I mean, basically all instances of hysterical strength end up with the savior being in the hospital:
      in one instance a boy save his brother by lifting a car, in the process he snapped both his forearms, ripped his biceps and crushed 3 teeth.
      In another a mother who fought a bear to save her daughter ended up with both her arms broken and she was fighting with on a leg that the bear had broken.
      Etc,etc, etc.
      Hysterical strength is not something meant to be used constantly, is a last ditch effort to survive, is the body deciding that it's possible to survive if it destroys itself.

    • @skeletorlikespotatoes7846
      @skeletorlikespotatoes7846 Před 11 měsíci

      Ah no. Humans are legitimately capable of lifting way more. Our brains just limit us. And under circumstances that would have caused damage we survive. That means there's way more to this than just "her bones would snap". Think deeper.

    • @robcubed9557
      @robcubed9557 Před 11 měsíci +858

      Even if she lifted a quarter of that weight, it’s still pretty damn impressive

    • @skeletorlikespotatoes7846
      @skeletorlikespotatoes7846 Před 11 měsíci +152

      @@robcubed9557 but humans have legitimately lifted way more weight. 2500 lb helicopter side.

    • @emanuelegaddi3545
      @emanuelegaddi3545 Před 11 měsíci +527

      A third is still more than 1000 lbs lol. That's a freaky feat of strength in general, let alone an out of shape woman approaching her 50s/60s without exercise

  • @lavenderpants8695
    @lavenderpants8695 Před 11 měsíci +2992

    Also need to consider that the woman who lifted the Impala didnt lift the ENTIRE car up off the ground. She just lifted one end, and that could jave been the trunk end of the car away from the engine. Still incredibly impressive, but you cant claim she lifted a full 3k lbs.

    • @disenfranchised2.073
      @disenfranchised2.073 Před 11 měsíci +327

      It would be equivalent to maybe a 450 lb. deadlift. Not huge but still very impressive for anyone without lifting experience. I'd bet she tore a few tendons, ligaments and some muscle tissue from that experience.

    • @darynjackson816
      @darynjackson816 Před 11 měsíci +294

      yh its a bit disingenuous and/or shows a lack of understanding of physics and/or journalistic integrity

    • @sran9492
      @sran9492 Před 11 měsíci +23

      I was just about to comment the same thing

    • @caedmonswanson2378
      @caedmonswanson2378 Před 11 měsíci +144

      It always annoys me when people say they “lifted 3,000 pounds”, complete nonsense. In strongmen competitions they lift up cars for reps, it’s easy when lifting from an edge.

    • @darynjackson816
      @darynjackson816 Před 11 měsíci +33

      @@caedmonswanson2378 I dont know about easy but yh he needs to be clear

  • @liweimiao6124
    @liweimiao6124 Před 8 měsíci +412

    For the impressive mother, I do not think she could’ve deadlifted a whole car, instead only lifted one side of the car. Therefore from the photos of her lifting the car, she had technically only needed to deadlift half of that weight by using pivot interactions. Anyway that is still very impressive for a human being (~750kg)

    • @mesia2453
      @mesia2453 Před 7 měsíci +20

      Power of a mother

    • @theguycalledturbo
      @theguycalledturbo Před 7 měsíci +45

      and there's also the suspension helping the lift, still impressive

    • @Darren51283
      @Darren51283 Před 7 měsíci +45

      @@theguycalledturbo Yeah, it's a given that she didn't lift one side of the car to the point in which both wheels (on that side of the car) were completely off the ground but instead just transferred a couple hundred pounds from the suspension over to herself, which would have had the effect of raising that side of the car by an inch or so and thus freeing her son and allowing him to slide out.

    • @Pamela-dv7gb
      @Pamela-dv7gb Před 7 měsíci +5

      There is a strong men who « lift » an ambulance(3T) but hé only lift 1 side so thé mother is probably not that much and they Did not talk about the floor (that’s an import factor) Bcs lift an car in this floor :/ is easier that this one:_

    • @daftdigital
      @daftdigital Před 6 měsíci +2

      You could bounce it up as well, using suspension and momentum. Also as the weight pivots over the opposite wheels, the weight on the lifter reduces.

  • @JohnPaulCauchi
    @JohnPaulCauchi Před 7 měsíci +48

    1:23 just a correction, larger muscles don't mean more fibres. Just that each fibre is bigger. When we train, our fibres get bigger. There has been some recent evidence that maaaaybe we also create more fibres in number, but mostly the growth is from fibre growth, not multiplication

    • @NoMirr0r
      @NoMirr0r Před 2 měsíci

      This checks out.

    • @neoney
      @neoney Před 2 měsíci +3

      exactly, that's what hypertrophy is

    • @brandiepop
      @brandiepop Před měsícem

      yeah while its proven that you do create more fibres the main part is fibre growth/strengthening

  • @thegulag666
    @thegulag666 Před 11 měsíci +2902

    When Eddie Hall broke the previous deadlift record (465kg) and deadlifted 500kg, he said he wasnt deadlifting half a ton, he was lifting a car off of his wife and kid to get that adrenaline boost

    • @manan5929
      @manan5929 Před 11 měsíci +727

      He said that the scenario the psychologist created in his mind for the lift was WAY DARKER than that and it was just an example

    • @wrxvv
      @wrxvv Před 11 měsíci +90

      @@manan5929 he said it was him pulling someone off his wife and kids

    • @wyattplenert
      @wyattplenert Před 11 měsíci +12

      did he not inject straight adrenaline or?

    • @manan5929
      @manan5929 Před 11 měsíci +254

      @@wyattplenert it was a drug free competition, but he tried to get as much adrenaline naturally as possible

    • @manan5929
      @manan5929 Před 11 měsíci +94

      @@wrxvv I think you didnt watch the full one ,he later says that it was way disturbing than lifting a car off his kids

  • @huskyxrichie6656
    @huskyxrichie6656 Před 11 měsíci +8359

    Hey man, just a quick correction on the squat record. Ray Williams holds the raw squat record at 1,080 lbs. Tom Platz never squatted 1,000 lbs or anything close. He was a bodybuilder who only did high rep squats

    • @Sam.Hudson07
      @Sam.Hudson07 Před 11 měsíci +796

      i was so confused when i heard him say that

    • @adtjtjdjsj
      @adtjtjdjsj Před 11 měsíci +413

      Toms heaviest recorded squat was 525lbs, but I think he once said that he managed to rep 600

    • @nickminneti825
      @nickminneti825 Před 11 měsíci +187

      That 1014 record was Fred Hatfield. Dr squat was the first to hit over 1000 in a meet back in the 80's. Tom and Fred were friends and they even did a couple demo lifts together. I would presume that could be the mix up.

    • @Jolli_-is7oo
      @Jolli_-is7oo Před 11 měsíci +15

      Yeah i dont know why he said that

    • @blairwedlock7029
      @blairwedlock7029 Před 11 měsíci +68

      Tom stoltmans never pulled 500kg either :/

  • @malcolm_in_the_middle
    @malcolm_in_the_middle Před 8 měsíci +4

    Bjornson's record is not official. The official deadlift record is still held by Eddie Hall at 500kg.

  • @Vagisaurus_Rekt
    @Vagisaurus_Rekt Před 8 měsíci +7

    What amazes me is that how important human psyche is in, well, everything. You can have big ass muscles and still lift less compared to someone "smaller" that properly utilizes their muscle mass. Also the fact that people in general perform way better, withour knowing what their limits "should" be.

  • @yqisq6966
    @yqisq6966 Před 11 měsíci +1229

    Regarding the 3500 lbs reference you need to take into account the center of mass of the car. Say if the center of mass is closer to the front (where the engine is) whereas the mother lifted the car from the rear, then the actual amount of weight she had to lift would be much less than 3500 lbs.

    • @Kcaedenn
      @Kcaedenn Před 11 měsíci +29

      Yeah that was what I was thinking!

    • @Skyrim279
      @Skyrim279 Před 11 měsíci +171

      Plus you don't lift the entire car, more likely two wheels were supporting a lot of the weight

    • @fingorchipz8662
      @fingorchipz8662 Před 11 měsíci +7

      @@Skyrim279 yep

    • @ronnana694
      @ronnana694 Před 11 měsíci +27

      and she looked quite well built too, not the average female

    • @deandejaguar
      @deandejaguar Před 11 měsíci +112

      This is true, but even taking that into account and she only had to lift one corner of the lightest part of the car - that's still looking like 400-600lbs, a feat *still* unbelievable by "normal" standards of strength much less by a housewife

  • @ecwilliams777
    @ecwilliams777 Před 11 měsíci +544

    Don't know if anybody has mentioned it but running the 4 min mile use to be thought impossible until roger banister did it. Shortly there after many more people did it. It was just a matter of redefining it as "possible"

    • @shawnshawn8685
      @shawnshawn8685 Před 11 měsíci +48

      Nah. In the past there wasnt any journalist in Africa

    • @ecwilliams777
      @ecwilliams777 Před 11 měsíci +26

      @@shawnshawn8685 bro wtf are you on about? Roger banister was an Englishman

    • @KaiBrunk125
      @KaiBrunk125 Před 11 měsíci +74

      @@ecwilliams777he’s saying people have been running like that in Africa for Centuries. Which is probably true

    • @KaiBrunk125
      @KaiBrunk125 Před 11 měsíci +19

      @@shawnshawn8685there’s a whole colony of people who literally run and are nomads. I forget their name but it would be some easy research. I read a book on them; insane life style. They run hundreds of not thousands of miles a week

    • @ecwilliams777
      @ecwilliams777 Před 11 měsíci +8

      @@KaiBrunk125 I get that's what he's saying but I don't think that's true. The first European came to sub saharan Africa in 1442 and the 4 min mile wasn't broken until the mid 1900s. I think if the Africans had been doing it before then someone would've noticed.

  • @tankeater
    @tankeater Před 8 měsíci +17

    Endurance was MUCH more important than strength long long ago.

  • @darecongabe5152
    @darecongabe5152 Před 8 měsíci +29

    I feel it would’ve been interesting to make comparisons between what is estimated to be the maximum potential human strength with the feats of Louis Cyr, the strongest man to ever live.

    • @Kamikazie65
      @Kamikazie65 Před 7 měsíci +1

      The greatest weight ever raised by a human being is 6,270 lbs. in a back lift (weight lifted off trestles) by Paul Anderson.

    • @brandiepop
      @brandiepop Před měsícem

      @@Kamikazie65 which isnt used modern day as the numbers go way too high for it to be measured accurately so we use things like deadlift, squat and bench to give more accurate strength results

  • @BrandonLeBlanc713
    @BrandonLeBlanc713 Před 10 měsíci +948

    as a powerlifter, hysterical strength is so real. while training in a gym, my max deadlift is 435 lbs, but at a competiton, my highest has been 485 lbs. Simply being somewhere with more hype and with the competition on the line I would be able to lift something that would exceed my expectations so easily.

    • @dontworry2379
      @dontworry2379 Před 9 měsíci +64

      @@DanLyndonthere’s clearly a difference between hype atmosphere and a situation where you or a loved one is in immediate danger and so obviously your body will react differently

    • @mistamomo
      @mistamomo Před 8 měsíci +24

      You had just hit your training peak. Nothing hysterical about that.

    • @crazypato3752
      @crazypato3752 Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@@mistamomowhat's training peak ?

    • @tomrhodesmays
      @tomrhodesmays Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@crazypato3752you have to peak for a competition by gradually increasing weight and decreasing reps, if you do this correctly your strength should hit an absolute maximum the day of your comp and it takes about 8 weeks of dedicated training to peak proficiently

    • @Twidenbar
      @Twidenbar Před 8 měsíci +12

      Great numbers for a 60kg female.

  • @Gnarlyboi
    @Gnarlyboi Před 11 měsíci +150

    Eddie Hall had said he literally had to get hypnotised into thinking his loved one is trapped beneath the weight he has to lift to be able to event attempt it.

    • @LawrenceTimme
      @LawrenceTimme Před 11 měsíci +10

      But it's not a real situation so it doesn't work.

    • @demoncore5342
      @demoncore5342 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Would not be surprised if he just made it up. 1000 lbs was considered impossible to lift, so was 500kg...

    • @FrenkieWest32
      @FrenkieWest32 Před 11 měsíci +31

      @@demoncore5342 why would he make that up? The lift would sound more impressive without this.

    • @demoncore5342
      @demoncore5342 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@FrenkieWest32 But it would not be a cool story...

    • @marshallbowdrie8562
      @marshallbowdrie8562 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Pepe-pq3omhard to say how much of a differnce it made

  • @chadouellette790
    @chadouellette790 Před 8 měsíci +2

    The human brain has the ability to unlock huge amounts of strength when facing a life or death situation. Mind over matter, if mastered, can be unbelievable.

  • @KerbsterCrushtic
    @KerbsterCrushtic Před 8 měsíci +7

    The curb weight of an a5 facelift vw beetle is 3045 lbs, meaning an elephant could support 6.56 times the weight of the car. If the car is fully loaded it is still only 5 times the weight to get up to 10 us tons.

  • @phinis6531
    @phinis6531 Před 10 měsíci +72

    Ronnie Coleman once said "If you can pick it up, it`s lightweight baby."

  • @chrismagalona9592
    @chrismagalona9592 Před 10 měsíci +219

    The woman only lifted a portion of the car's weight. It was only 1/4 to 1/3 of the weight of the car but it was still an expressive feat of strength especially if she's not really weight lifting.

    • @Niewiem0
      @Niewiem0 Před 2 měsíci +10

      Excatly,i dont belive she pulled all wheels into air

    • @beanward_xd527
      @beanward_xd527 Před 2 měsíci +12

      likely very small range of motion too which makes it a lot easier to do the lift

    • @TripleS474
      @TripleS474 Před 2 měsíci +2

      But still. It's rare and impressive

  • @johnsantos1225
    @johnsantos1225 Před 7 měsíci

    My dad tells me the story of when he was in high school and the bus they were on got in a serious accident. He got out to help people. Someone told him to go to their truck and get a tool from their built in truck tool box. It was locked so he basically bent the lid in half. When they went back later nobody could believe it or even flex it. Shock and adrenaline are very powerful.

  • @xXGrEyZXx
    @xXGrEyZXx Před 7 měsíci +2

    Mother literally used the power of love like an anime character to lift that car

  • @irjonesy
    @irjonesy Před rokem +62

    I know it was already talked about, but I just have to say that your accent change is super impressive. Your delivery is smooth and sounds great, I think this will boost the channel

  • @PAINLESS1000
    @PAINLESS1000 Před 5 měsíci +4

    May Doomslayer be born one day.

  • @dewannoohliban3691
    @dewannoohliban3691 Před měsícem +4

    "Super mouse"

    • @antifreeze-30degrees49
      @antifreeze-30degrees49 Před 26 dny +4

      No gene edits, no steroids, not even SARMs (SARMs is half as good as steroids with almost no side effects, but I don't want to be a SARM goblin). Just good old fashioned ADHD power or maybe Geranamine (Geranium Extract, DMAA, Dimethylamylamine) and good old fashioned titanium foam bones for wolverine bones to lift 20,000lbs+. IT'S OVER NINE THOUSAND!!! Mega-bones! Bones so strong due to titanium foam, you could lift 25,000lbs to 100,000lbs+ and effortlessly survive high speed car crashes with no broken bones. Wolverine bones is the future! Super mouse indeed, but with Wolverine bones to raise the limits of gains to unimaginable levels. Galactic unit Super Mouse the size of Gigantic Galapagos Turtles (Like huge bolders).

  • @itsreallydante
    @itsreallydante Před 8 měsíci +166

    As a powerlifter for fun. I weigh 71kg, and was an average Joe. My first deadlift is 100kg on my PR. When everyone believed I can only lift 70-80. Then the following month I lifted 140kg with the same Bodyweight. I still have the same Bodyweight and my PR is now 170kg.. I hope it keeps climbing
    Update: pulled 180kg on deadlift!

    • @Ryan-wx1bi
      @Ryan-wx1bi Před 8 měsíci +15

      Ok?

    • @SacredSilence95
      @SacredSilence95 Před 8 měsíci +7

      My body works like that too. When I start to work out after a long time of not doing it, my strenght doubles and triples with time while my body weight and my appearance remain almost the same

    • @NoGoatsNoGlory.
      @NoGoatsNoGlory. Před 8 měsíci +8

      ​@@SacredSilence95that's cuz your fast twitch fibers recover to the point to do maximal lift.

    • @jonharrison3114
      @jonharrison3114 Před 7 měsíci +5

      Nice keep going brother 💪

    • @fived9424
      @fived9424 Před 7 měsíci +7

      @@Ryan-wx1bi Something wrong Ryan?

  • @GregoryCarnegie
    @GregoryCarnegie Před 11 měsíci +340

    In a deadlift, you're applying force to the centre of mass of the bar, but in the cases with the cars, they would have applied the force to the edge of the vehicle.
    The car would act like a lever, so while the vehicles weigh a lot, the people didn't lift the total weight; probably closer to half, which is still impressive.

    • @roderickreilly9666
      @roderickreilly9666 Před 11 měsíci +15

      ANYONE WHO CAN DEADLIFT 700LBS can lift the back end of a car no larger than mid-size and smaller. Now thats very strong, and that mom obviously couldn't do that, making her feat still astonishing.

    • @disenfranchised2.073
      @disenfranchised2.073 Před 11 měsíci +20

      It's actually closer to a quarter. It's the heaviest at the bottom and gets easier as it pivots upward. If I'm not mistaken, the center of gravity in an Impala may be closer to the front axle.

    • @roderickreilly9666
      @roderickreilly9666 Před 11 měsíci +7

      @@disenfranchised2.073 : the center of gravity of most cars is closer to the front axle because of the engine.

    • @lucasheredia3579
      @lucasheredia3579 Před 11 měsíci

      220 lbs dl, may a bit more but the half of a car nah bro u r delusional

    • @GregoryCarnegie
      @GregoryCarnegie Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@lucasheredia3579 220lbs? Nah, that would mean 12 year olds can deadlift a car. I think Roderick 9666's 700lbs number is more plausible.

  • @loqloqloqloqloqloqloqlo
    @loqloqloqloqloqloqloqlo Před 8 měsíci +3

    This is very true, One time at my job my boss told me to hire 4 friends plus me to lift a tractor engine that was around 600lbs, I was able to push it onto a pallet jack by myself, I was able to move it with it, but at the time of putting it on to a pallet the engine got stuck between the arms of the pallet jack, I ask to my friends for help but they were busy, I decided to do it myself again, I tried several times for about a week, I tried not hurting myself, but I tried lifting it to the point I felt my knees shaking, I finally gave up a Friday, the following Monday I tried again for the last time, I don't know how and I can't explain it but I was able to lift it in my first intent and push it on to the pallet and it wasn't even that hard, I don't know how the body works but that amazed my self, I'm not a big muscular guy but I was able to do that without hurting myself or my knees

    • @Gooseliver491
      @Gooseliver491 Před 8 měsíci

      Impossible.

    • @Dmoriarty1993
      @Dmoriarty1993 Před 3 měsíci

      Mind over matter, perhaps.

    • @SlipTied
      @SlipTied Před 2 měsíci

      After a weak, and your boss allowed it
      My boi, what bullshit are you playing

  • @Isaac-bc3nr
    @Isaac-bc3nr Před 8 měsíci +1

    For the 3 big lifts, something more important than strength is leverages. Short femurs and long arms for squat and deadlifts, short arms for bench.

  • @do_odman
    @do_odman Před 11 měsíci +463

    Hapfthor's deadlift was with straps and a suit... which is fine but it is useful information to tell people, also considering that there are even stronger deadlifts with even more favorable equipment being used out there, and even disregarding that, Danny Grigsby is very close to beating Thor's deadlift completely raw.

    • @rookieman329
      @rookieman329 Před 11 měsíci +9

      What did eddie hall use?

    • @do_odman
      @do_odman Před 11 měsíci +35

      @@rookieman329 same thing as thor

    • @veiledhunter3088
      @veiledhunter3088 Před 11 měsíci +1

      From images in google his technique is sumo right?

    • @do_odman
      @do_odman Před 11 měsíci +21

      @@veiledhunter3088 at most I would say it's wide conventional, he's a very tall person so his relative stance width isn't that wide proportionally and his hands are still on the outsides of his legs while with sumo you would be widening the legs far enough to be able to pull with the arms inside them.

    • @huhwhy
      @huhwhy Před 11 měsíci +15

      @@veiledhunter3088 Danny Grigsby is a sumo puller yes. Thor and Eddie are conventional as per strongman rules.

  • @Tork789
    @Tork789 Před 11 měsíci +249

    I feel like Eddie is being robbed for not being mentioned for lifting the magic 500 number. And he did it in a competition, while Thor lifted the 501 at home, so he had the advantage of choosing to lift at his peak, and Eddie actually had to program his training plan for the competition, which makes it more impressive imo.

    • @lbds954
      @lbds954 Před 11 měsíci +25

      A few misleading things here. First of all, Thor *didn't* have the advantage of choosing his peak. He was actually scheduled to do the lift in a competition. But, when Covid struck and the competition was cancelled, he *had* to do it in a gym instead *because* he had reached his peak at that time and couldn't wait around. So in regards to prep, Thor and Eddie were on equal ground. Both were scheduled to do the lift on a certain date, and both stuck to that.
      Second, Eddie might have technically been present at a competition during his 500kg lift, but he didn't truly partake as a competitor because he didn't follow any competition rules. He only did the deadlift event, no others. He also got to dictate the weight jumps during the deadlifts *at the expense of other competitors* for his own comfort. Brian Shaw had to drop out early because of this, as Eddie decided in the middle of the comp to increase the weight more quickly than initially planned for his own comfort. And on top of this, he also got to choose his own rest times and decide when he lifted on the day. Plus, he also used some of his own gear, and is on record saying he used his own bar. So Eddie used his own equipment, chose his own weight jumps, chose his own rest times, and chose not to compete in anything but the deadlift that day, some of which had a negative effect on the other strongmen competing - *none* of that follows competition standards in any way, shape, or form. The whole event was catered around him to help him achieve his lift.
      Then, when you look at the fact that Thor *did* have predetermined weights jumps and predetermined rest times that he rigidly stuck to for his lift, as though he were in a competition, it's actually very clear that Thor followed competition standards much more closely than Eddie did.
      And just to clarify, I'm not trying to discredit Eddie's lift. Both lifts were performed in front of a qualified judge with calibrated weights, so both are clearly legitimate and recognised records. But Eddie's lift was not more impressive, as Thor actually followed stricter standards. I just find it funny that Eddie is so determined to hypocritically undermine Thor's lift for not being *in competition* when Thor actually followed competition standards far more closely than Eddie himself did.

    • @Tork789
      @Tork789 Před 11 měsíci +36

      @@lbds954 Facts are facts, Thor did it out of competition, his lift still counts, but it wasn't in a competition, and it wasn't a round number, which makes it less impressive for me personally, you of course are free to disagree.
      And for the other stuff that you mentioned, that honestly feels like slandering, I bet if Eddie did anything to the detriment of other lifters or even simply bent the rules to his advantage, Thor would object as he was present in that competition. So this "stricter standards" line of argument sounds dubious to me.

    • @lbds954
      @lbds954 Před 11 měsíci +7

      @@Tork789 I mean yes, you can very much make an argument that Eddie's lift was more impressive due to the huge jump in weight compared to a 1kg jump. I'm not arguing that at all. I'm just pointing out the objective fact that Thor actually followed a far stricter regiment on the day of the lift, which is in response to you saying Thor had more advantages - which he objectively didn't for the reasons I outlined.
      It's also not "slander" at all as it's all unarguably true. You can research it for yourself. Brian Shaw himself has said that he had to drop out of the competition earlier than he planned to because Eddie chose to up the weights more quickly than scheduled. That, paired with Eddie getting to choose his own rest times and use his own equipment (which he has admitted to on camera during an interview) show that Eddie was very heavily catered to in order to help him achieve the lift.
      And I'm also not saying that any of this means Eddie's lift shouldn't count. It absolutely should, as Eddie performed the lift with calibrated weights in front of a qualified judge. Just like Thor's lift should also count for the same reasons. My point is that, while *both* Thor and Eddie met the necessary requirements for the lift to count, Thor actually went a step beyond and followed far stricter standards than Eddie did. He did this deliberately due to the circumstances with Covid, as he wanted to make sure there would be no question whatsoever that he achieved the lift legitimately. And Eddie claiming it needs to be done "in competition" retroactively is hypocritical, as he didn't follow "competition" standards during his own lift. All of this is easily researchable if you don't believe me, and you can look everything I've said up for yourself.
      My stance is this: both lifts count as both lifts met the necessary requirements. But if Eddie wants to start changing those requirements and claiming a lift needs to follow competition standards to be official, his own lift wouldn't count either. He only took that stance because of his rivalry with Thor, but it makes absolutely no sense as he himself didn't follow competition rules. Again, both lifts count - it's just that Eddie's reasoning for saying his own lift should count whereas Thor's shouldn't is hypocritical and makes no sense.

    • @WokeVeganLiberal
      @WokeVeganLiberal Před 11 měsíci +19

      ​@@lbds954you cannot lift in your home gym with you dad weighing the plates and claim it's a world record. Sorry.

    • @marturomano
      @marturomano Před 11 měsíci

      isn't programming for the competition literally peaking as you said Thor did? lol

  • @burieddreamer
    @burieddreamer Před 8 měsíci +1

    There is a huge difference between lifting a full automobile for a small amount of time and lifting one half of it while the other half leans on its end, for a brief moment, and dropping it a bit further away.

  • @soronos8586
    @soronos8586 Před 7 měsíci +2

    As the man in the thumbnail I can confirm these estimates as accurate.

  • @TheGreatSeraphim
    @TheGreatSeraphim Před 11 měsíci +260

    The absolute limit of our lifting strength is based on the load capacity of our femur. Which is around one metric tonne of load. Varying slightly from person to person depending on size, health, gender, etc. But ultimately how our bones are designed puts a cap on how much we can lift because our bones are designed like the crumple zones of a car, meant to flex and break to absorb impacts from things like falls.

    • @wildwilie
      @wildwilie Před 10 měsíci +23

      You made me think of Scot Mendelson, he was talking about benching over 1000lbs in the equipped category and saying. A little over 1000lbs is when I would start to feel my forearms bones bend a little once under the full weight. Also the current equipped bench record is currently at 1,320lbs (598.7kg). Also at the 2017 arnold strongman classic there was a 1500+ lbs yoke, which would put quite a bit more impact weight then 2 metric tons per step.

    • @seijin4426
      @seijin4426 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@wildwilie that depends on your sturdiness, gravity, mass, precision, and technique.

    • @wildwilie
      @wildwilie Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@seijin4426 Brian Shaw + 1500lb yoke is 100% very much over 2000lbs with each step he's taking.

    • @sammorrissey9094
      @sammorrissey9094 Před 9 měsíci +31

      Forgetting that people who train more have denser bones and people who are larger have the force spread out over a larger cross section.
      Also the ultimate strength is based on the weakest link of any specific lift. Usually this is around a joint, which is why ligament, tendon and dislocations are much more common than broken bones in powerlifting/weightlifting. The exceptions to this are when significant load is applied to a locked joint, or twisting force is applied that does not exceed the load of the muscles but does of the bone (see Magnus Samuelsson vs Nathan Jones)

    • @fullercrane1795
      @fullercrane1795 Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@sammorrissey9094 You do realize men and women have different bone structure. In the skull, hips and pelvis. So when you say people am sure you meant men. As people include women and children . That do not have the most abatable bone structure to do such things.

  • @martinvanburen4578
    @martinvanburen4578 Před 8 měsíci +22

    I always wondered about this question. Great video!
    Strength is not just about muscle, adrenaline is a chemical and mental strength is the other aspect. The ability of our mind to push us to the limit.

  • @MediHusky
    @MediHusky Před 8 měsíci

    When you deadlift more than the average man: I'm just built different.

  • @Pleeze
    @Pleeze Před 8 měsíci +1

    Interesting watch, I can see a lot of effort was put into this video!
    In these cases of people lifting cars off of other people, they're not actually lifting the mass of the car as you claim, but rather only lifting one side of the car, which (even if the car's center of mass was perfectly centered) would be easier than lifting half of the car's total mass (since it would start as half, but as you lift higher more weight would be put on the 2 wheels you aren't lifting. Theoretically, had you lifted it high enough, the weight you're lifting would approach 0 as you approach lifting the car all the way up to being balanced vertically)
    And since a car's center of mass isn't perfectly balanced or centered exactly between the 4 wheels, they could be lifting from the side that's farther from the center of mass, which gives them more leverage.
    Don't get me wrong, these are still mind-blowing and they may still hold as valid proof of extreme hysterical strength, I just think you shouldn't claim that mother lifted 3 times heavier than the world record deadlift.

  • @BBQDad463
    @BBQDad463 Před 11 měsíci +57

    Thank you for this video.
    I found an article noting that Tom Platz had squatted 525 for 23 reps but could find no reference to a 1,000-plus squat.
    Not that I would put it past him. They didn't call him Quadzilla for nothing.

    • @stewpleee
      @stewpleee Před 11 měsíci +10

      hes called quad father, not quadzilla

    • @fishoutofwater3752
      @fishoutofwater3752 Před 11 měsíci +7

      Yeah, he must have read that Tom Platz had a squat record and assumed he had the heaviest squat record...

    • @liamgade8399
      @liamgade8399 Před 11 měsíci +2

      He’s never done a max squat ever. Only high rep ranges

    • @SonofTiamat
      @SonofTiamat Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@stewpleee Naw, you're thinking of King Quad

    • @brendanroberts1310
      @brendanroberts1310 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@stewpleeePaul demayo was quadzilla I believe

  • @madiskruusmann302
    @madiskruusmann302 Před 10 měsíci +150

    There are also veins and arteries that we need to talk about. If I remember correctly, then lifting heavy objects also increases your blood pressure. Eddie Hall (probably others as well) had a nose bleed when he lifted 500 kg and I believe he also passed out and his blood pressure was so high that when it was measured, it didn't show up. (I might be mistaking correct me if you know better)

    • @seer6755
      @seer6755 Před 8 měsíci +14

      Never heard that he passed out but he did say in an interview that he showed signs of a concussion for a few weeks after his world record deadlift

    • @sinistressdreams7243
      @sinistressdreams7243 Před 8 měsíci +34

      No you are definitely right. Watched a video from Eddie Hall where he also spoke about this incident. He said he lost sight for a short moment and everything went black, also his mind went blank so I would count this as a blackout.
      The nosebleed is also correct, he also bleeded a little bit out of one eye if I remember correctly, not 100% sure on the eye bleeding though.

    • @seer6755
      @seer6755 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@sinistressdreams7243 i think i remember the eye bleeding being mentioned.

    • @fullercrane1795
      @fullercrane1795 Před 8 měsíci

      There's not much to talk about veins and arteries. Everyone has them. You want any better you have to hope for good genetics and have a healthy lifestyle. Blood pressure is more of side effect. It's the muscles and bones taken the workload. The heavier the workload the more blood flow is required to move the muscles.
      Eddie Hall had a nose bleed because he was holding his breath while taking a tremendous strain on his body.

    • @budadi
      @budadi Před 8 měsíci +9

      @@fullercrane1795 No he had nose bleed cuz of enormous BP, you dont hold your breath while maxing out, you exhale in the cosentric face to embrace your core.

  • @ToneysReviews
    @ToneysReviews Před 8 měsíci

    A video on theoretical strength that relies on the tensile strength of bones without factoring the more you lift the more dense your bones become, thus the maximum limit is increased.

  • @Steve-vf7se
    @Steve-vf7se Před 7 měsíci +2

    Back in his day, Arnold Schwarzenegger lifted the most heaviest weights on the planet. Nothing stopped him from lifting it, doing his thing. It's kinda cool, how men and women workout these days, awesome

  • @trancemadmaz
    @trancemadmaz Před 11 měsíci +35

    Vlad Alhazov has squatted 525kg while only using knee straps which is effectively a raw squat. Tom Platz to my knowledge hasnt not squatted anything near 460kg

    • @PinataOblongata
      @PinataOblongata Před 11 měsíci +5

      You mean knee WRAPS and they are not raw, they will put at least 10-15kg on your squat. Neoprene knee SLEEVES are closer to raw, but even they help a little. The coolest thing about Vlad is how he rehabbed after a total knee replacement and went on to squat more than before the surgery, showing all of us in line for a TKR what is still possible.

    • @1988antenne
      @1988antenne Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@PinataOblongata 10-15? u mean 50-60 depending on ur max? wraps help extremly for squatting.

    • @PinataOblongata
      @PinataOblongata Před 11 měsíci

      @@1988antenne I could be a little under (I don't compete with wraps, but I help out with feds that do) and I doubt it's that much. Google says 25-40kg. I'm a lighter lifter in the 69kg class, natty, stiff bar and sleeves only (like IPF) so I'm used to dealing with smaller numbers ;)

    • @apexg6571
      @apexg6571 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@1988antenne50-60 if you squat in the 400s maybe. For the average person it will be around 20kg

  • @longtongue2961
    @longtongue2961 Před 11 měsíci +16

    Thank you for this video, and thank you very much for translating the pounds into kg, for someone who has been using the metric system their whole life, it helps understanding the measurments better. Great video, keep it up

  • @aliozanerbektas
    @aliozanerbektas Před 8 měsíci +1

    We don't need to build up muscles to lift 1000kg, thanks to our intelligence, we can build devices that can do it for us. That's an evolutionary step we chose.

  • @fythers6273
    @fythers6273 Před měsícem +3

    Hey so the hole 3500 pound car thing is a sham, the women probubly slightly lifted the back end off its suspension, while the car was 3500 pounds she was probubly liting closer to 500 pounds

  • @DeceptiveJ
    @DeceptiveJ Před 11 měsíci +11

    Eddie hall talks about having to be hypnotized to complete his 500kg deadlift so i doubt someone without training could achieve that level of hysterical strength

    • @thorfinn2749
      @thorfinn2749 Před 11 měsíci +3

      the start is the hardest point in a deadlift, he could pull up to 700 800 kg if it was just pulling

  • @ThighErda
    @ThighErda Před 11 měsíci +7

    It's also important to note most of that impala's weight was at the front, and most had a lever called "The frame" acting on it

  • @adityashukla7849
    @adityashukla7849 Před 7 měsíci +1

    There are so many conditions and catches to everything explained in this video that I won't even begin with the explaination.

  • @benbraceletspurple9108
    @benbraceletspurple9108 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Besides supernatural miracle, it is assumed the mother who lifted a car simply relieved the springs and pulled the kid out, equal to moving 500 lbs. Since she wasn't injured afterward and the car was lifted quite high, it is assumed to be a supernatural miracle.

    • @worldprops333
      @worldprops333 Před 7 měsíci

      its assumed to be hysterical strength you bonehead dumbass retard cuck

  • @kevingray4980
    @kevingray4980 Před rokem +35

    How did you leave out body mechanics? How your skeleton is proportioned and where the ligaments attach has just as much to do with strength as muscle fiber, bone density, etc. That's by far the biggest reason gorillas are so much stronger than elite human athletes.

    • @roderickreilly9666
      @roderickreilly9666 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Excellent points. Also? The sheer frame size of a gorilla provides it with a major leverage advantage.

    • @A1_Amir
      @A1_Amir Před 10 měsíci +1

      Strength is determined by how much force can be sustained in the whole body. Depends highly on genetics, which stem from a long generational chain of your ancestors constantly pushing their limits with their bodies in the prime ages of 10 - 60 years old.

    • @kevingray4980
      @kevingray4980 Před 10 měsíci

      @@A1_Amir If you were born when your parents were 30, how could anything they do after that effect your genes? Isn't evolution shaped mostly by reproductive advantage and surviving near extinction events?

    • @japanesecar1501
      @japanesecar1501 Před 8 měsíci

      Is it ? IDK how much different they really are. I don't even know anymore, but I think that is "kind of debunked".
      Gorillas and other just train mega hard, and they are happy doing it, this in turn makes their joint and bones huge and dense, and their strength reflects that, lb for lb. We train very little, and use as little strength as possible. We still share mostly the same mechanisms for regulation and growth as they do, but we stimulate those less, due to having more nuanced behaviour. I know chimps did some pulls on a pulley, a female did some 800-900 lb janks, but a human could do it too.
      The balance of where does mental stimulation begin and end, and what is needed, needs cutting into, to understand what really is different between us. They train every day, and they like it, mostly because of their "somwehat" hardwired physiological differences, but the biggest of the bone differences is tied to brain, its size, and being effective while standing.
      A human with a simpler brain could, perhaps, very well approach the conditioning of a more wild, natural ape. While I do believe we have some shaping as per this topic, we are largely the same, if not almost the same. I thibk the difference is, by far, mostly neurological, and of training history. No athlete will ever put as much effort nonchalantly as a wild ape, as they are subconsciously bound to the rate and timing of the society around them, and how the individual reacts and influences the others, every sport is finding "the human way", and politics, and a mental endeavour alltogether. The active rest and ease of work a chimp can do isn't reached by athletes at large.
      You cannot push against the clock, steroids and hormones need counterbalance, and in the end, you inflate the rest, always sub-optimally, and nothing really changes, you just get old fast, and parts of you super fast, which damages long term progress, and then you lean into being "a freak" that can withstand superhuman muscle loading, despite being damaged from the inside.
      It's all in the stable and steady- nuance and simplicity. You are bound to eventually outperfom users( not saying it's all in stone, but hear me), you are more effective, and age slower, you are more sensitive to anabolism- only need a 1/20 the chemical stimulation for 80% the outcome-. When you use you throw nuance out of the window, you accept side-effects for diminishing returns per- time, invite ineveitable imbalance induced damage- health is strength. I am not saying that nautrals will be as jacked as users, but they can grow bigger and healthier, eventually ending up stronger, with a peak well beyond breaking age of most athletes, and then, being better. But that cannot be done with fake incentives and for fake external goals. Many of the strong people, and giant men around, are so due to having a more balanced in and out, and are still of a stronger foundation, and in places stronger full stop, than the best juiced athletes in all of modern history. Health is wealth, as is being of substance all around.

    • @kevingray4980
      @kevingray4980 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@japanesecar1501 wow. What a reply. I enjoyed every word, but I think we are talking about different things. There's a peak fitness level determined by genes, and I'm sure most humans are less likely to get as close to it as apes living in nature, but then there's the mechanics of the individual.
      For instance, my brother in law has limbs proportioned differently than mine, with a shorter upper arm and thighs compared to forearm. You wouldn't notice unless you looked for it, but once you pay attention it's obvious.
      This changes the leverage, giving him about a 10% advantage on how much weight he can bench press assuming the muscles are exactly the same strength. However, in one lift I am performing more work as the bar travels a greater distance. So in a punch I will generate more energy. We can train equally hard, but there's always going to be that tradeoff where I will have more power if left to my own devices but it won't will lose on that strength check. I can run with a higher speed, but not match the acceleration.These imbalances are part of what makes comparing different athletes so intriguing.
      Now the difference between a human and ape are far more pronounced. From an engineering perspective, they're built much sturdier, but less energy efficient. Our relative flimsiness is the price we pay for being able to travel over 50 miles a day via bipedal movement. No amount of training will enable a gorilla to match that feat.

  • @zichithefox4781
    @zichithefox4781 Před 11 měsíci +253

    It's really neat we're at a point where we can modify our bodies in such extreme ways, but every time it's brought up, the words of Dr. Malcom run through my head: "You were so preoccupied with whether or not you could, you didn't stop to think if you should."

    • @stevenweint7893
      @stevenweint7893 Před 11 měsíci +8

      Dr. Malcom is a fictional character.

    • @zichithefox4781
      @zichithefox4781 Před 11 měsíci +68

      @@stevenweint7893 The meaning behind the quote is there nonetheless.

    • @sakuparkkonen2959
      @sakuparkkonen2959 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Oh,taste and see that the lord is good! Blessed is the man who take refuge in him!
      Psalm 34:8

    • @doodoo2065
      @doodoo2065 Před 10 měsíci +2

      For we to know if we should we need an universal moral ground, and that doesnt exist.

    • @MissiFull
      @MissiFull Před 8 měsíci

      @@doodoo2065 Should we?

  • @Jim-no6dq
    @Jim-no6dq Před 7 měsíci

    pure diamant content, great job, keep up your great work

  • @vishensivparsad
    @vishensivparsad Před 8 měsíci +1

    remember, she didnt lift the whole car, so she didn't lift the full 1500 kg, and depending which part of the car she lifted, she didn't have to lift the engine for example. But its still nuts that she did it anyway

  • @60kgofpower68
    @60kgofpower68 Před 11 měsíci +38

    lol tom platz ? dude u better check ur data ... raw squat record is held by dan bell at 500 kg ... tom platz was a bodybuilder in 70s and 80s known for his high reps squats, he did like 23 reps or so with 525 lbs i think ... never did singles

    • @alexschutz7283
      @alexschutz7283 Před 11 měsíci +5

      That's probably a result of putting that set into one of the 1 rep max calculators. Will always be a remarkable feat!

    • @derkaptin1611
      @derkaptin1611 Před 11 měsíci +5

      yeah that whole vid is a mess imo so much wrong or incomplete data

    • @fishoutofwater3752
      @fishoutofwater3752 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@alexschutz7283 Well the 1 rep max calculator is completely inaccurate, especially at high reps.

  • @slightlytwistedagain
    @slightlytwistedagain Před rokem +259

    What excites me about CRISPR is that these new super humans will be able to remove the limitations the body has when we start colonizing space. A major problem the human body has is that bones start to disappear when in zero gravity. If CRISPR can isolate that auto switch so it doesn't do that we then don't have to worry about building gravitational technology (spinning ships) to prevent bone loss. Same with growing new limbs if they have been amputated. It is super exciting, but scary because no doubt super humans will be used by ambitious nations to conquer one another. I wouldn't be surprised the CCP has already secretly grown super humans with CRISPR technology seeing as they don't give a damn about human rights.

    • @revolutionsendtimeschurch
      @revolutionsendtimeschurch Před rokem +16

      you're deceived.
      there is no such thing as space, and crispr is from the fallen.

    • @skeletorlikespotatoes7846
      @skeletorlikespotatoes7846 Před 11 měsíci +6

      😂 what. I'm developing this shit and no one has it yet. 😂 And we already can lift way more than we think. Our brains just limit us.😅

    • @markcnut17
      @markcnut17 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@revolutionsendtimeschurch your church is already in the dust. Apostate

    • @jmard3101
      @jmard3101 Před 11 měsíci +14

      We can now have real life space marinea minus the rituals and multiple surgeries 😂

    • @adtjtjdjsj
      @adtjtjdjsj Před 11 měsíci +42

      ​@@revolutionsendtimeschurch you're denying the existed of space?

  • @AdaptaniumArt
    @AdaptaniumArt Před 7 měsíci

    My boy in the thumbnail got that lvl 100 gyat

  • @klaasdeboer8106
    @klaasdeboer8106 Před 7 měsíci

    I remember with the boyscouts walking through a field with bulls in their puberty, suddenly the bulls ran towards us and all of us, boys and girls in the age of 12 to 16 y/o ran away from the bulls and we just jumped over a fence which afterwards looked way to high to normally jump over. This sprint and jump were not in the superhuman range but still, we would probably not been capable to do that under normal circumstances.

  • @atab6555
    @atab6555 Před rokem +16

    Do this for runing aswell please,i've been looking for something like this

    • @CuriousReason
      @CuriousReason  Před rokem +4

      I did on running, enjoy: czcams.com/video/6XqpY6aah2Y/video.html

  • @Phoenix-ik7bm
    @Phoenix-ik7bm Před 8 měsíci +6

    Considering that the human body evolved for endurance and stamina, not speed or strength the fact that we've been able to find ways to push these factors as high as we have is nothing short of astonishing.

  • @robinpage2730
    @robinpage2730 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Imagine a human able to go toe to toe with a full grown silverback gorilla, and come out on top. That would be strength.

  • @Hey-withrizz
    @Hey-withrizz Před 7 měsíci

    props to the man who peeled his skin for this video

  • @luckyluke4525
    @luckyluke4525 Před 8 měsíci +34

    As long as the wheels are on the ground, you have only to lift a part of the weight of the car. The springs take a lot of the weight. And it´s also important at which point you grap the car and if the ground is even or not, etc.
    You may have more power in extreme situations, but nobody lifts 3500 pounds.
    PS: If you ever have to lift up a car after an accident on one side, open the door and use the lever by grapping the door as far on the outside as you can and lift it.

    • @mzvarik
      @mzvarik Před 8 měsíci +3

      Yep... people like to believe mysteries, but we live in a real world

    • @mistaowickkuh6249
      @mistaowickkuh6249 Před 7 měsíci +1

      I used to service heavy industrial machines with gigantic sized bolts and nuts. I'm talking size 50s and way beyond. These devices usualy came out of accident or fires so these bolts would usually be extra grippy on top of their normal strength.
      A simple way to unscrew these is to attach the fitting wrench to them, find a meter or longer steel pipe which is about the same width of the tool and get the pipe on it. Then you get a hammer you find suitable and tap at the end of the pipe. Very quickly you'll see the bolt or nut loosening and coming off easily. If the bolt isn't broken or welded itself somewhere requiring to be cut, you can use leverage for your benefit here.
      HOWEVER! Don't play around with devices you don't recognize and you are not trained with. Don't ever try to remove anyting on machines you don't know! I heard a terrible story of a guy removing bolts from the cap of a still highly pressurized air compressor reservoir. The reservoir itself was 1 meter wide, 2 meters tall approximately with big bolts holding its cap. Sadly, when he came to the stage where the remaining bolts couldn't hold the cap anymore, they failed catastrophically and the cap exploded upwards towards his face and removed his head clean off.
      Don't play with machine before training you guys!

    • @plagued._
      @plagued._ Před 7 měsíci

      🤓

  • @somerandomdragon558
    @somerandomdragon558 Před 11 měsíci +3

    "The human body is a remarkable machine"
    The human body:
    Back pain from laying in a bad position while still sleeping on a soft bed.

    • @DOKTORPUSZ
      @DOKTORPUSZ Před 10 měsíci

      Blame the brain, not the body

    • @ShoaibMalik-un1gu
      @ShoaibMalik-un1gu Před 10 měsíci

      Tbf Humans were never adapted to sleeping on such soft surfaces.

    • @filbao8113
      @filbao8113 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@ShoaibMalik-un1gureally

  • @ballpython3310
    @ballpython3310 Před 8 měsíci

    I lifted a garage door one handed one time to get my other hand's fingers out of between the panels, I can't lift the door with both hands normally. The spring had went so i had the full weight of the door.

  • @kimberleypex
    @kimberleypex Před rokem +32

    Mental power in life/ death situations are so big , thats great. The power of the brain on the body is tremendous ! I saw and heard many miraculous examples !

    • @CuriousReason
      @CuriousReason  Před rokem +8

      Some people are too tough for their own good. For example, in the world of MMA, there are fighters (ex Cain Velasquez) whose mind are stronger than their body and they get injured while training hard. Their mind won't give up when their body is worn out.

    • @kimberleypex
      @kimberleypex Před rokem

      @@CuriousReason Agree. But I mean when its about your life , or a kids life , or parents , or an animal. Not fighters. But normal people without muscles training . I think cortisol and endorfine and adrenaline in high doses driven by the brain ( in life-death situations) are so high , everything is possible. This is very interesting , I saw this on you tube and all the miraculous situations came back.

    • @amazingjackJF
      @amazingjackJF Před 11 měsíci +4

      the effect isnt as amazing as you think, noone had ever caught it on video, a human does not just 10x their strength everrrrrrrrrr, its a load of rubbish, in a world with cameras in everyone's pocket for 20 years find me one video of someone who inexplicably lifts 10x what they usually could?????

    • @joaopedroandsan2172
      @joaopedroandsan2172 Před 11 měsíci

      @BRETT yep

    • @joaopedroandsan2172
      @joaopedroandsan2172 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @BRETT people just don't know basic physics lol

  • @mawage666
    @mawage666 Před 11 měsíci +11

    Brad Castleberry has shattered all of those records! 💪

  • @mq1405
    @mq1405 Před 8 měsíci +6

    2:55 wdym 9000kg is 2.5X the weight of a VW beetle, a beetle does not weigh anything close to 3.6 tons

  • @Pamesahne
    @Pamesahne Před 8 měsíci +1

    I find it important to note that lifting cars is foundamentally different from lifting weight. When lifting a car from the back (with the motor block in the front) most of the weight lies on the other axis.
    Although impressive, this makes a car much "easier" to lift.

  • @ryananzisi996
    @ryananzisi996 Před 11 měsíci +35

    Many years ago a strongman Paul Anderson was reported to have did a backlift of over 6200 pounds which would be in excess of the amount you claimed to have been a limit. He also was an Olympic weightlifting champion.

    • @roderickreilly9666
      @roderickreilly9666 Před 11 měsíci +7

      Actually? That was embellishment on Anderson's part. He lifted in the range of 4500 to 4,800 lbs, still an astonishing feat. The backlift, typically only involves moving the stack a few inches, but still. More recently, a Canadian did a backlift of a pair of subcompact cars.

    • @maherabdu5358
      @maherabdu5358 Před 10 měsíci +9

      yea, i and i did a backlift of 800 pounds when i came from the toilet and was refreshed

    • @roderickreilly9666
      @roderickreilly9666 Před 10 měsíci

      @@maherabdu5358 😆 😆 😆!

    • @kevinbarry7475
      @kevinbarry7475 Před 8 měsíci

      Guinness has disproved Andersons former record

  • @Brukner841
    @Brukner841 Před 11 měsíci +20

    0:15 Wow, Bjornsson did do Hall dirty by upping the weight by 1 kg, and at home, with his own judges.

    • @TheUniquename002
      @TheUniquename002 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Yeah but because it wasn't in competition it still doesn't beat the record for during a competition.

    • @Brukner841
      @Brukner841 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@TheUniquename002 yeah, hope so, I just wish Eddie got the recognition he deserved.

    • @SUBHRAJITDEY972
      @SUBHRAJITDEY972 Před 11 měsíci

      Yes

    • @FrenkieWest32
      @FrenkieWest32 Před 11 měsíci

      his own judges? That's not how it works. A judge is a judge. And upping a record by 1kg is usually how people break records. Nobody considers this dirty.

    • @Brukner841
      @Brukner841 Před 11 měsíci

      @@FrenkieWest32 well they could have been in his pocket, he broke the record in his home gym in iceland with icelandic judges and his own weights, very fishy, I understand it was the pandemic, but it seemed like a way to steal Eddie's thunder, and he did, few people know Eddie by name, meanwhile wooden Thor got all the events, paper views, seems so unfair, especially since Eddie is so funny, well at least they fought each other and decked each other to the floor.

  • @sailadun6603
    @sailadun6603 Před 7 měsíci

    The quad father still stands even after all this time

  • @pedroc3948
    @pedroc3948 Před 8 měsíci

    Man, the visuals on this video. I got bits of information, I'm a bit slow. But the graphics kept me on.

  • @JiggaOfficial
    @JiggaOfficial Před 8 měsíci +21

    Eddie Hall lifting the 500KG is a great case study. It was just training for a heavy lift, he trained himself to remove the brains limiter, well partially. He went to a psychologist to do so and it was a very dark process of hypnotism. To achieve the lift, he said it was a person in his life he was lifting off his kids. (Likely his father or grand-father , never confirmed for obvious reasons but he alluded to the point it was someone close) He went into a hypnotic state which he sought out the psychologist to do. This feat changed his eye color on camera its one of the phenomena that is very interesting. The movie split explored this idea with multiple personality disorder. The ability to remove the. brains limiter has the power to turn us into something more than what we can train to achieve in any realm or metric!

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne Před 8 měsíci +17

      I love when people just make shit up

    • @JiggaOfficial
      @JiggaOfficial Před 8 měsíci

      @@mrosskne czcams.com/video/mnZ4ftlifik/video.htmlsi=HStvvRIiorbWwnNN Eddie’s video talking about where tmi took what he said and put it here, I love when people make themselves look stupid online…

    • @drswaqqinscheckingin7210
      @drswaqqinscheckingin7210 Před 8 měsíci +2

      eye colors do not change spontaneously due to a change in ones mindstate no matter what. Maybe they filled up with blood as he burst all the blood vessels in his eyes but that's not his eyes changing colors lmao.

    • @JiggaOfficial
      @JiggaOfficial Před 8 měsíci

      @@drswaqqinscheckingin7210 agreed the scientific reasoning behind it, we’re not disregard that what we high-light is how he induced this process, I don’t think you understand that you could go try to pull your max weight and you’ll injure yourself before you get it off the ground far less push yourself to the point where you can burst the vessels in your eye. Your body isn’t designed to allow you to push pass those limits and damage itself but here we watched him do it. Kindly watch the video in full before replying everything mentioned here was talked about there

    • @drswaqqinscheckingin7210
      @drswaqqinscheckingin7210 Před 7 měsíci

      @@JiggaOfficial what are you even saying brother? I think you’re missing a few words in your reply because I cannot decipher it. I watched the whole video, I’ve seen pictures-high quality zoomed in pictures where you can see the blood start to leak from his nose and his eyes are the same color they always are-blue. The whites of his eyes is extremely bloodshot, but the colored part of his eye the iris is blue, like it always is.

  • @derkaptin1611
    @derkaptin1611 Před 11 měsíci +6

    4:01 u sure about that squat record?

  • @JustinBobby-di9zt
    @JustinBobby-di9zt Před 8 měsíci

    Dude straight made an advertisement for YK-11

  • @LDNinetyNine
    @LDNinetyNine Před 8 měsíci

    the strange thing is that you will *rarely* use your full 100% strength. normally, you’d only go up to 60%, and 80% during rigorous trainings. you would only use 100% in dire or desperate situations.

  • @Heeroneko
    @Heeroneko Před 11 měsíci +16

    Problem with the muscle growth being increase is that the mice are more prone to tendon injury, so it's probably gonna be useful for ppl who have muscle atrophy, but I don't think it's going to be applicable for outright muscle growth without some serious negative side effects that end up hindering training long term.

    • @Aureonw
      @Aureonw Před 10 měsíci +1

      What you're forgetting here you're not just gonna enhace the muscles, you're gonna enhance everything else too ala Spartan 2's from Halo to absolutely get the peak perfomace you can get out of your body and not get any bottleneck, tbh I still think it would be just easier at that point to skip flesh entirely and go straight for synthetic metal bodies

    • @Heeroneko
      @Heeroneko Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@Aureonw It does not increase tendon growth. That's the problem. That's why I said that. It's a known problem they've seen in mice during testing. I...I wasn't guessing. This isn't a hypothetical, it's a real drug. It's potential, esp for ppl with muscle atrophy, cannot be overstated. It's just not magic. You still have to be careful about it and work to build up your physique naturally. Hell, even if it DID build up tendon strength, you still need to train your brain properly to utilize those muscles fully. Muscle memory is largely influenced by this and NO amount of muscle is a replacement for proper technique. I know I came off like i'm just knocking it, but it's just me wanting ppl to be wary and careful so they don't end up tearing their acl.
      I fucking wish we were at the point where we could just go full cybernetic enhancements tho. I think I'd prefer nano augmentation style over a full synthetic body tbh. I'm paranoid af about companies doing the whole 'we have to reposes your body because you didn't pay the late fee' type shit.

    • @Aureonw
      @Aureonw Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@Heeroneko A fair concern, cyberpunk wise, but what I meant by not just muscle enhacements and etc is literally messing with DNA to make either myostatin inhibition natural to get bigger muscles, (also I knew of it that it doesn't increase tendons) mess with the dna to alter the density and the capacity of the neurons to connect to each other to make every single cell inside of your brain work more efficiently and make you smarter than any man today ever could have been on just pure random evolution, messing with tendons growth either inhibitors so it doesn't grow out of control or helping the body create stem cells so it heals itself without scarring or only scaring for faster wound closing and then the body goes around replacing the scar tissue with actual cells that work not just flex tape that when on organs don't help them do their work

    • @Heeroneko
      @Heeroneko Před 10 měsíci

      @@Aureonw Yeah that'd be neat.

    • @doodoo2065
      @doodoo2065 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Considering that Ai is literally helping in science now i dont see those ideas as something that crazy anymore

  • @bismarckrathod5890
    @bismarckrathod5890 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Imagine how strong an elephant will be on steroids

    • @trancemadmaz
      @trancemadmaz Před 11 měsíci

      Probably wound end up becoming WWE champion

    • @vorox7658
      @vorox7658 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Prolly be eating 24/7 by the amount of mass and how heavy it is (square cube law)

    • @stevenweint7893
      @stevenweint7893 Před 11 měsíci +1

      There is an elephant on steroids. His name is Eddie Hall.

    • @magisteryura
      @magisteryura Před 10 měsíci

      If it needed that it would produce natural steroids. But it did not. If humans needed more strength to survive they would be bulkier. But in reality smaller, weaker but more social humans eleminated strong big neanderthals for example. Human can outrun horse on a long distance and eat it in the end. So evolutionary humans and more endurance inclined than raw strength. With big brain and social power humans totally dominate right now. So what if you are big, scary elephant if 10-15 orginized monkeys kill and eat you and your family in the end.

  • @user-zz6tb7vy9w
    @user-zz6tb7vy9w Před 8 měsíci

    it was said on numerous occasions at least in my country that our body is capable of enduring and lifting much harsher conditions and weights its just that we are limited by our brain that established a cap for how much an individual can lift SAFELY... if we went all out without any restrictions , im sure that most people , especially the fittest ones would deadlift almost double of our maximum, its just that our brain tells your body "nope" simply because if you went unchecked by your brain your body wouldnt be able to take the stress... its one of those things that "can we do it?" yes, "but should we do it" kinda thing... picture this like a Toyota Corolla with his standard engine (our brain) but now our brain is "turned off" meaning the standard engine of said Corolla was swapped with an Aventador engine... can the car run? sure, but the foundation would eventually start crumbling

  • @H_P_Lovecraft
    @H_P_Lovecraft Před 7 měsíci

    Guy in the thumbnail is built like a Space Marine 💀

  • @JrobAlmighty
    @JrobAlmighty Před 10 měsíci +9

    I like the boulder example best.
    The hiker/mountain climber had a boulder that he instantly propelled with all his strength but it shredded all the ligaments from his muscle and split tendons etc.
    That's the weak spot in our physiology and anatomy. We have fine tuned motor skills for tool use. Our anatomical supporting cast isn't up to challenge and probably limits us intentionally to avoid catastrophic injury.

  • @usonumabeach300
    @usonumabeach300 Před 8 měsíci +7

    As any marine, or most people military trained to push themselves, you can override your brain's limiter. I know many former marines who have hurt themselves by pushing past it. I've worked a handful of jobs where I, or other guys with similar backgrounds, have out done guys who were inarguably stronger than us because of this. My forearms were effectively ruined because of this.

    • @pjacefilms
      @pjacefilms Před 8 měsíci

      Permanently or just until they recovered?

    • @MGrey-qb5xz
      @MGrey-qb5xz Před 7 měsíci

      omg what happened to your forearms please tell us, are they recovering now?

  • @ardacitak9503
    @ardacitak9503 Před 8 měsíci

    I think its pretty cool how human literally have such a trigger that makes them break such limits for the sake of their loved ones, sometimes even sacrificing their health in the process.
    testament to how believing it is half way and compassion is n our blood. sick asf honestly :D

  • @kkolxasram
    @kkolxasram Před 8 měsíci

    The amount of pressure the bones of the human body can withstand is one limiting factor. The amount of tension tendons and ligaments can withstand is another limiting factor. So even if you can built massive mussels if the thickness of the bones and the thickness of tendons and ligaments do not increase in proportion, the mussels will tear your ligaments and tendons, and break your bones before it can lift the intended weight.

  • @thenew4559
    @thenew4559 Před 11 měsíci +23

    To be fair, the leverages when lifting up one side of a car vs deadlifting a barbell are completely different. It's not unusual to see athletes who aren't even half as strong as Hafthor Bjornsson to be able to easily deadlift a car for reps (I remember seeing the CZcamsr Alan Thrall doing that in place of deadlifting when gyms were closed at the start of the pandemic). The strongman Brian Shaw has even put an entire car up on top of a leg press and pressed it for reps before (czcams.com/users/shortsbv0ypPZ2vdU). Nevertheless, lifting up a car is still an incredible feat of strength for an untrained mother.

    • @mr.beagle1438
      @mr.beagle1438 Před 8 měsíci

      Nuh uh

    • @Andrewtate200
      @Andrewtate200 Před 4 měsíci

      Bruh Denis literally used to pull a truck with single hand for arm wrestling practice😂

  • @Senpai_Ace
    @Senpai_Ace Před 11 měsíci +18

    Just for the record, Eddie “The Beast” Hall (2016 Worlds strongest man) was the first man to ever deadlift 500kg. No disrespect to Thor, cuz he beat the record, but he wasn’t the first and he didn’t break the record in competition whereas Eddie Hall Did.

    • @hedgehog1965uk
      @hedgehog1965uk Před 11 měsíci +2

      Yes, I was just thinking that Eddie would be pissed off to not even get a mention in this video, when his lift is still the OFFICIAL deadlift record. Thor did it in his home gym during lockdown (even if it was refereed by Magnus Ver Magnusson and the plates were even individually weighed in front of him). In any case, Eddie will always be the first man to ever lift half a tonne.

    • @edi6722
      @edi6722 Před 10 měsíci

      @@hedgehog1965uk I count thors because there was literally no competitions for him due to covid. If he stayed at his weight and strength for an indefinite amount of time he could’ve easily died. Also it was sanctioned by WUS (Worlds Ultimate Strongman) so it should count

  • @tuyube
    @tuyube Před 7 měsíci

    Excellently made video 👍👍

  • @Goabnb94
    @Goabnb94 Před 8 měsíci

    It would be interesting to have a subset of the Olympics (or other events), where anything goes, all the steroids or performance enhancers you want, to see just how much can be extracted from the human body.

  • @roderickreilly9666
    @roderickreilly9666 Před 11 měsíci +127

    THERE ARE HUMANS WHO'VE LIFTED ALMOST 5,000lbs.
    It's an old strongman stunt called the BACKLIFT, in which the lifter raises a big stack of weight on a sturdy platform a few inches using both arms and legs. It's rarely performed now and it represents the only way to lift that much weight.

    • @shadowpanther298
      @shadowpanther298 Před 10 měsíci +21

      I believe the record is 6,600 pounds, lemme fact check rq.
      Edit: dang I was way off, the record is 5340 lbs, held by Gregg Ernst in. 1993. With nowadays training with is much more advanced, I wonder how much some people could lift 🤔
      Edit 2: Paul Anderson lifted 6,200 pounds, so gotdamn

    • @roderickreilly9666
      @roderickreilly9666 Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@shadowpanther298 : thanks for that update. Was it a Canadian guy? Was the weight two subcompact cars?

    • @bokuden79
      @bokuden79 Před 10 měsíci +8

      @@shadowpanther298 Paul Anderson did a 6,270 lb backlift. I don't give a damn what Guinness says.

    • @shadowpanther298
      @shadowpanther298 Před 10 měsíci +6

      @@bokuden79 lemme google that
      Yes you’re correct, but he went for the “most weight ever raised by a human” not backlift, so yeah he holds record for most weight but not backlift, mb

    • @randybarnett2308
      @randybarnett2308 Před 8 měsíci

      Sri Chirmoy supposedly lifted over 5000 pounds with one arm, but I think he was the forerunner of Brad Castleberry,the fake weight king !!!💪😩

  • @ayoubelkharassi
    @ayoubelkharassi Před rokem +4

    Thanks for the information

  • @vincentmerkenhof5188
    @vincentmerkenhof5188 Před 8 měsíci

    The UTS or ultimate tensile strenght of bone is 130Mpa but that of construction steel is around 400 Mpa on the low end..

  • @Illuminwhy
    @Illuminwhy Před 7 měsíci

    Our brain stops us from using 100% of our strength, but when it’s a life or death situation, we allegedly unlock full strength, kinda of like removal technique in Kegan Ashura

  • @adnanbezerra6014
    @adnanbezerra6014 Před 10 měsíci +3

    I once lifted a whole refrigerator, which fell over me. I was ~7 years old by the time. I remember thinking it was actually light by the time. perhaps it was this hysterical mechanism

  • @doom1609
    @doom1609 Před 11 měsíci +10

    I’m currently in college and studying biology, in hopes to one day work on human enhancement and advance gene-editing techniques. I’ve done research and even a paper on ethics and Justice of human enhancement. It’s all very fascinating and I have a long way to go

  • @onionring1531
    @onionring1531 Před 8 měsíci

    On the topic of human strength, remember the number one reason you don't want a light car is because it only takes a few bored friends to carry it around and put it in places you'll never be able to drive out of.

  • @chspotato4774
    @chspotato4774 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Am I trippin or did these man just change his accent a minute in

  • @akansh1
    @akansh1 Před 8 měsíci +3

    9:49 real life captain America in the making